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Novo Nordisk (NOVO-B.CO)
Novo Nordisk shares plunged after it missed estimates for its second-quarter operating profit as the company behind Ozempic sold fewer of its weight loss and diabetes drugs than expected and cut its profit forecast.
Sales increased 25% to DKK68bn (£7.82bn/$9.94bn) in the period, below the 26.7% pace forecast by analysts.
Europe's largest company by market cap said that the 25% increase in net sales was driven by diabetes and obesity care as well as insulin sales. GLP-1 diabetes sales increased by 32% year-on-year, up from 30% in the previous quarter.
Read more: FTSE 100 LIVE: European stocks rise as markets climb back from panic
Obesity care sales rose by 34% compared to a year ago, slowing from a 41% increase in the first quarter. Sales of the diabetes treatment Ozempic and the popular weight-loss drug Wegovy rose by 30% and 53%, respectively.
Earnings before interest and tax also came in below the forecasts at DKK25.93bn compared to DKK26.86bn for LSEG. Net profit for the quarter was DKK20.5bn, short of expectations of DKK21.3bn.
Additionally, Novo Nordisk trimmed its operating profit outlook for full-year 2024, saying growth was now anticipated to come in between 20% and 28%, rather than the previously expected 22% to 30% range.
CEO Lars Fruergaard Jørgensen said: "We are pleased with the sales growth in the first half of 2024, which has enabled us to raise the outlook for the full year." However, the firm has trimmed its operating profit growth forecast to between 20% and 28%, down from the 22% to 30% predicted in the first quarter.
Airbnb (ABNB)
Airbnb shares dropped over 15% in after-hours trading after the company reported second-quarter earnings that missed analyst expectations and amid signs of slowing demand from US customers.
The San Francisco-based company reported quarterly profit of $555m compared to $650m last year.
It expects third-quarter revenue to be between $3.67bn and $3.73bn, below analysts’ estimate of $3.84bn, according to London Stock Exchange Group data.
Revenue rose 11% from a year earlier to $2.75bn, slightly higher than analysts' forecasts.
The vacation-rental platform said it booked 125.1 million nights and experiences in the second quarter, a 9% increase from a year earlier.
However, it cautioned that it was “seeing shorter booking lead times globally and some signs of slowing demand from US guests.”
The company also said it had removed more than 200,000 low-quality listings since it launched its “quality system” more than a year ago.
Glencore (GLEN.L)
Glencore will retain its coal and carbon steel business as its boss seeks to boost profits for shareholders.